
Crowdsourcing is one of those wonderful concepts that only exists because of the internet. A decade ago it would have been unthinkable that a small company in Brisbane could have tapped into the huge pool of brilliant computer programmers in India or cutting-edge designers in Russia.
But crowdsourcing isn’t just one of those cool web 2.0 ideas — it’s a quick and practical way for freelancers to save thousands on a huge variety of tasks. For a few hundred dollars, it’s well worth giving it a go.
- 99designs: SitePoint’s sister site, 99designs, is the place to go to get everything from a logo to a web site designed by the huge community of professional designers. It’s easy to use and has a strong community, so you are very likely to get the design you want over the course of a seven-day contest.
- ScriptLance: Don’t get an expensive local computer programmer in – put the job on ScriptLance and outsource your task to the cheapest bidder. Think about it – with armies of underutilised programmers sitting in Asia and Eastern Europe, there’s bound to be someone around the world to prepared to do your job on the cheap.
- Guru: Guru is a bit of a one-stop crowdsourcing shop, where you can find freelance professionals to help you with everything from legal matters to design to IT to engineering and accounting.
- NameThis: Need a name for your new product or business? Simply post a description at NameThis, pay $US99 and in 48 hours the community will come up with a selection of three names for you to choose from.
- iStockPhoto: If you need a cheap image for your corporate brochure, website or presentation, iStockPhoto is the place to go. It also has video files and will soon offer audio files for sale.
- Threadless: Loved by fashionistas and businesses alike, Threadless is a crowdsourcing design site dedicated to t-shirt design. If you want to get a great t-shirt design and create a bit of buzz about your brand, this is the place to go.
The Fine Print
Be prepared for a bit of an adventure if you decide to use a crowdsourcing site — you can never be quite sure what you are going to get back from the community involved.
On design sites such as 99designs, you will need to be prepared to wade through a large number of different designs, some of which will be entirely inappropriate. You might even find that your contest ends without you finding the right design, in which case you’ll still have to pick a winner and pay the prize anyway (it’s considered bad form not to).
The best way to get around problems like this is to be as specific as possible in your brief. Tell the community exactly what you want, provide examples where appropriate (such as your corporate style guide, preferred colours and other designs you like) and keep communicating with the community to refine your idea.
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Wonder what would happen to Sitepoint if the western world stopped buying their books, because they where all broke from being undercut by the designers and programmers in Asia and Eastern Europe.
Maybe in a way web dev and design as an occupation is dying in the west as it becomes uneconomic. Maybe we should all become accountants instead.
October 31st, 2008 at 2:44 pm
Having a cynical Friday arvo, Gary? :o)
October 31st, 2008 at 3:25 pm
Every 2nd post is a plug for 99 designs. I think sitepoint have no honour.
October 31st, 2008 at 7:23 pm
Looking at the current economic storm I am afraid these sites would close their setup……..
October 31st, 2008 at 7:40 pm
I think the best bet is crowdspring.com
October 31st, 2008 at 10:23 pm
Or eLogoContest for Logo Design Contests.
November 3rd, 2008 at 1:12 am
what the hell type of post this is … they are definitely doing marketing for their & other sites & in the process they are misguiding their readers.
Where is elance.com , getacoder.com, getafreelancer.com, rentacoder.com … i bet these are the the most popular sites when it comes to freelancing.
huh … bullshit article. I have wasted my time by reading this article.
November 8th, 2008 at 4:10 am
Crowdsourcing is fine. One issue to consider is to make sure your client is fine with you crowdsourcing the work. They might not like their to-be-designed logo published on the internet prior to having their ownership of it first. I guess that is why some of these site have a feature called “private project” where the public is not able to see the work in progress.
November 8th, 2008 at 6:30 am
Since these comments are already going down the path of listing worthy sites not included in this post, why should I be the one to stop a trend?
I’m a fan of TopCoder Studio (http://studio.topcoder.com). They’re the only site I’ve seen that runs contests for Flash, HTML, widgets, mobile, etc. There’s only so many logo design contests one designer can compete in. :)
November 14th, 2008 at 5:03 pm